Rapier108 said:
I wasn't referring to a random nutcase leftist. I was referring to an assassination planned and carried out by the deep state.
Agreed
Rapier108 said:
I wasn't referring to a random nutcase leftist. I was referring to an assassination planned and carried out by the deep state.
Yup, I like this idea. If that's the game they want to play, time to go scorched earth. Do it!RoscoePColtrane said:
The first document that the POTUS needs to release, that wouldn't need to even be declassified is the Hush Money list from Congress, where Tax money was paid to silence complaints of sexual misconduct. He should be able to get his hands on it I would think, and it's an expenditure of federal funds that should be public anyway. Redact the victim's names and put it out to the public.
Cepe said:
I want to see the media members paid by fusion for stories.
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March, 2017, two days before former FBI Director James Comey testified to lawmakers that the bureau had an open counterintelligence investigation into President Trump's campaign, former British spy Christopher Steele sent an urgent message to Department of Justice official Bruce Ohr hoping that "important firewalls will hold" when Comey testified.
The text message from Steele, who compiled the infamous unverified dossier on Trump, was sent on March 18, 2017, to Ohr and obtained by SaraACarter.com from a government source, familiar with the ongoing investigation.
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We're a bit apprehensive given scheduled appearance at Congress on Monday. Hoping that important firewalls will hold.
Interesting but this really caught my eye:Quote:
Ohr writes back later that day, saying "Sorry, no new news. I believe my earlier information is still accurate. I will let you know immediately if there is any change."
It is not certain, based on the limited communications obtained by Congress between the pair, what Ohr was referring to when he discussed "earlier information" that he delivered to Steele.
LINKQuote:
Months before Comey's testimony, on Nov. 21, 2016, the handwritten document by Ohr lists a possible meeting with Strzok, Page and Special Agent Joe Pientka (who along with Strzok interviewed former National Security Advisor Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn). The document is one of several hundred documents obtained by lawmakers after long battles with the DOJ.
In the handwritten note, Ohr jots down, "no prosecution yet, pushing ahead on M case," in reference to Paul Manafort, who is now facing years old charges on financial crimes and money laundering.
Ohr also wrote on the same memo, "may go back to Chris," in reference to Christopher Steele.
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In reality, there is almost certainly much less here than meets the eye. In short, while we are just now learning that Pecker and his subordinate, Dylan Howard, were granted immunity, this appears to have happened many weeks ago to be precise, shortly after search warrants were executed in April on the office and residences of Cohen, President Trump's former lawyer. Back then, prosecutors did not know whether Cohen would fight them or plead guilty. They needed Pecker and Howard in order to tighten up the case against Cohen, not necessarily to make a case on the president.
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First, a word about those charges. It has become common to refer collectively to Counts 7 and 8 as the "campaign finance offenses," as if they were indistinguishable from one another. We need to be more precise. This is not a situation in which the same statutory crime has simply been charged twice because there are deals with two different women. Counts 7 and 8 are saliently different, invoking distinct provisions of the campaign finance laws and proceeding on divergent theories of liability.
Specifically, Count 7 charges Cohen not with making an illegal donation, but with "Causing an Unlawful Corporate Contribution" (emphasis added). By contrast, Count 8 alleges that Cohen himself made an "Excessive Campaign Contribution" (emphasis added).
Let's focus first on Count 7. Federal campaign finance law makes it illegal for a corporation to make direct ("hard money") contributions to candidates. Count 7 alleges that Cohen induced AMI (through its executives, Pecker and Howard) to use the "catch and kill" strategy i.e., to pay $150,000 for the exclusive rights to former Playboy model Karen McDougal's story about an affair with Donald Trump, but to bury it rather than publish it.
Much has been made about Cohen's admission in court that the payments to the two women involved Ms. McDougal and Stephanie Clifford, the porn star known as "Stormy Daniels" were made "in coordination with and at the direction of" candidate Trump. Yet Cohen (and, derivatively, Trump) made no payment at all to McDougal; AMI paid the $150,000.
That's a neat trick, eh? Remember that snippet of a tape between Cohen and Trump was about this transaction, the one that never happened.Quote:
That was not the way it was supposed to go. The plan was for Cohen (backed by Trump) to reimburse most of the costs by paying AMI $125,000 to transfer the rights to McDougal's story to a dummy corporation ("Resolution Consultants LLC") set up by Cohen. At the last minute, however, Pecker balked at this arrangement (which was memorialized in a signed agreement seized through the Cohen search warrants). Pecker was evidently following the advice of counsel: If AMI sold the rights to Trump, it would manifestly have bought the story to help his campaign, not for journalistic reasons.
These facts created a proof problem for prosecutors: How to charge Cohen with an illegal contribution when he didn't pay any money? They solved this problem by accusing him of causing the corporation to make the illegal contribution. But to pull that off, they needed Pecker and Howard as witnesses. That, I believe, is why they gave the AMI executives immunity.
So the timing between the release of the Access Hollywood tape was the sole motivating factor? Not quite. Also, I don't think Avenatti was Stormy's lawyer during this phase. Some guy named Davidson was and there were some questionable prior dealings between Cohen and Davidson. So where is Davidson in the charges?Quote:
Let's compare Count 8. It alleges that Cohen himself made an excessive contribution. This is the much more straightforward Stormy Daniels payoff: Through another dummy corporation ("Essential Consultants LLC"), Cohen paid her $130,000, far in excess of the $2,700 limit for individuals.
There is an ironic twist to this transaction. It was the AMI executives who alerted Cohen that Ms. Clifford was shopping her story. Cohen ended up cutting a deal with Clifford's lawyer (Michael Avenatti) to buy her silence just days after publication of the infamous "Access Hollywood" video (in which Trump is heard bragging about groping women). The temporal proximity of the video's surfacing and the hush-money agreement is a key fact relied on by prosecutors to allege that the payoff was election-related (i.e., an in-kind campaign contribution), not just hush money to avoid personal embarrassment.
Stormy herself was driving that bus as the election loomed and her story would become less valuable after a Hillary win as everyone expected. Yet nowhere in this mess is Trump. Indeed, Andy points that out.Quote:
Upon making the agreement, though, Cohen failed to pay the money. After three weeks of this foot-dragging, Clifford got impatient and threatened to go public. AMI's Howard got wind of this and warned Cohen in a text. Howard and Pecker followed up with an encrypted phone call, after which Cohen forked over the $130,000.
Normally legal sleights of hand are fascinating to me. But when they get too attenuated to the law, squeezing some inconvenient square facts into a legal round hole, as was done here, I have to wonder if the allegations would survive the harsh light of a courtroom and appellate review.Quote:
Consequently, the script flips: Just as it was said in Count 7 that Cohen caused AMI to make an unlawful corporate contribution, it could also be said in Count 8 that Pecker, Howard, and AMI caused Cohen to make an excessive campaign contribution. Of course, the immunity agreement protected the two executives on this score, and the corporation has not been charged.
Nice post.aggiehawg said:
Of course, with a guilty plea we'll never know the answer to that question.
I had that question as well. Would a judge just rubber-stamp this? Or at least request a brief in support of the legal theories advanced here? And would the judge allow an amicus brief from outside parties since Lanny Davis obviously wouldn't submit a countervailing viewpoint.blindey said:Nice post.aggiehawg said:
Of course, with a guilty plea we'll never know the answer to that question.
With respect to the plea, I'm rather surprised that an Article III judge (even if a dyed-in-the-wool Obama appointee) would actually sign off on that plea. It's one thing to be a pettifogger in front of the bench but to be a pettifogger on the bench is really bad. Most judges I know would never let their reputation get attached to something like this.
On the rubber stamping part, the answer should be "no." And in every situation where I've seen an Article III judge accepting a guilty plea, the answer is no. Federal judges take the process of accepting a guilty plea very seriously and frequently have questions for the defendant to answer directly. I recall waiting for a hearing in (I think, this was like 8 years ago so don't hold me to it) Judge Lake's court in S.D. Tex. while he was in the process of accepting a guilty plea. I think he spent at least 15 minutes talking with the defendant, making sure that he understood what the plea meant, what rights he was giving up, etc. It was a solemn process if ever there was one.aggiehawg said:I had that question as well. Would a judge just rubber-stamp this? Or at least request a brief in support of the legal theories advanced here? And would the judge allow an amicus brief from outside parties since Lanny Davis obviously wouldn't submit a countervailing viewpoint.blindey said:Nice post.aggiehawg said:
Of course, with a guilty plea we'll never know the answer to that question.
With respect to the plea, I'm rather surprised that an Article III judge (even if a dyed-in-the-wool Obama appointee) would actually sign off on that plea. It's one thing to be a pettifogger in front of the bench but to be a pettifogger on the bench is really bad. Most judges I know would never let their reputation get attached to something like this.
William Inblack said:
How can the swamp be drained if all of its creatures keep getting immunity deals.
When a CFO gets immunity, the target is the CEO.William Inblack said:
How can the swamp be drained if all of its creatures keep getting immunity deals.
aggiehawg said:When a CFO gets immunity, the target is the CEO.William Inblack said:
How can the swamp be drained if all of its creatures keep getting immunity deals.
This might be just making a mountain out of molehill. The Cohen case should essentially be over with his plea. The CFO was granted immunity in that case and that case alone as it is being reported. The information on the phony and padded invoices likely was corroborated by the CFO that they were paid.RoscoePColtrane said:
So the SDNY is giving the DFO of the Trump organization. Even Fox is misreporting on this saying this is Mueller and it's not. Giving him immunity just keeps him from pleading the fifth, not sure in what court that may be in, Cohen has plead out. Is the SDNY gone rouge and opened a criminal case on the Trump Organization on for campaign violations? That's a bit bizarre? Where is the head of the FEC on all this?
Sounds like a blitzkrieg to me. Russia and Collusion is out. Obstruction is out thus far, this sounds like an attempt to bait Trump into obstructing Justice.
LINKQuote:
When The Post called Cohen's lawyer, Lanny Davis, at the time to confirm the report, he said as an anonymous source that it was accurate.
But Thursday, Davis, speaking on the record, apologized for confirming something he did not know to be true.
"I regret that I wasn't clear enough to The Post. I should have been more clear. I could not independently confirm the information in the CNN story," he said.
"I'm sorry that I left that impression. I wasn't at the meeting. The only person who could confirm that information is my client."
The SDNY is working with the New York DA to bring whatever charges they can make up against Trump, his family, and his employees.RoscoePColtrane said:
So the SDNY is giving the DFO of the Trump organization. Even Fox is misreporting on this saying this is Mueller and it's not. Giving him immunity just keeps him from pleading the fifth, not sure in what court that may be in, Cohen has plead out. Is the SDNY gone rouge and opened a criminal case on the Trump Organization on for campaign violations? That's a bit bizarre? Where is the head of the FEC on all this?
Sounds like a blitzkrieg to me. Russia and Collusion is out. Obstruction is out thus far, this sounds like an attempt to bait Trump into obstructing Justice.
Well oddly enough, I think this could be right. The way they're setting this up, trump is not gonna be able to pardon these people. Mueller and company are not fixin to finish up. They're just getting started. And as far as there being hell to pay? Who's gonna make them pay It? The republicans? The corrupt DOJ? I'm a trump guy and voter, and will vote for him again. If he's there.Rapier108 said:The SDNY is working with the New York DA to bring whatever charges they can make up against Trump, his family, and his employees.RoscoePColtrane said:
So the SDNY is giving the DFO of the Trump organization. Even Fox is misreporting on this saying this is Mueller and it's not. Giving him immunity just keeps him from pleading the fifth, not sure in what court that may be in, Cohen has plead out. Is the SDNY gone rouge and opened a criminal case on the Trump Organization on for campaign violations? That's a bit bizarre? Where is the head of the FEC on all this?
Sounds like a blitzkrieg to me. Russia and Collusion is out. Obstruction is out thus far, this sounds like an attempt to bait Trump into obstructing Justice.
The deal will be, "if you resign, this all goes away." If you don't, we'll send your kids to prison for life.
Quote:
In the early days of the Trump administration, a memo of uncertain origin circulated at the highest levels of the White House laying out a conspiracy theory about "coordinated attacks" on President Trump's foreign policy agenda from a group of former Obama administration officials, according to a memo obtained by The New Yorker's Adam Entous and Ronan Farrow. The memo, which "reads like a U.S. military-intelligence officer's analysis of a foreign-insurgent network," they wrote, posited that "the communications infrastructure ... used to sell ObamaCare and the Iran Deal to the public ('Echo Chamber') has been shifted from the White House into the private sector."
The unsigned, undated memo dubbed the alleged cabal the Echo Chamber, and while "Trump Administration officials familiar with it offered conflicting accounts of who authored it and whether it originated inside or outside the White House," its content, language, and themes bear remarkable resemblance to internal documents from the Israeli private-intelligence firm Black Cube, Entous and Farrow report.
In May, Farrow and Britain's The Observer uncovered a Black Cube campaign targeting the alleged ring leaders of the "Echo Chamber," Ben Rhodes and Colin Kahl, plus their families. Black Rock told The New Yorker it "does not get involved in politics" and "is not aware of the documents mentioned in this article, neither their contents.".....
Find his communications with Evelyn Farkas. She admitted to being in on it, among many others, according to her.Quote:
Ben Rhodes...
Wrong kid but same pointhbtheduce said:
Another fun tidbit: remember the parkland high school kids. David Hogg took a selfie with Nellie ohr and called her "the founder of the movement"
Both her and her husband are ****ing anti-American losers.